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Andrii is 9 years old.

When Russia occupied his village in the Kyiv region, he saw things no child should ever see.

Yet, he keeps dreaming of peace, victory, friends and relatives.

His drawing is displayed in the exhibition Mriyu (I dream), which we opened today in Brussels to pay tribute to Ukrainian courage and resistance, one year after Russia's full-scale invasion.

70 drawings made by Ukrainian children are on display to remind us about war's most vulnerable victims.

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Simon

@EU_Commission Stop funding the war so countless, and bring them to the negotiating table

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KColeman

@EU_Commission The exhibition of Ukrainian children's drawings "Mriyu" (Mriyu) is a charitable project with a wide geography. The authors of the drawings are Ukrainian children, who suffered during the war in Ukraine, who unite, draw and talk about their main dream. mriyu.org/

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Thorium

@EU_Commission For the future stability of the world, Russia must be pushed out of Ukraine. Even after this is done, they must not be allowed to operate as an equal to other countries until they renounce aggression. Unfortunately, I don't see how this can come about.

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Deus Vult

@EU_Commission

Russia attacked Ukraine because all European countries joined NATO. Ukraine was supposed to be the buffer country between Russia and Europe.

#NATO destroyed the Russian pipeline and Russia made its own parallel economy so I don't think that Russia has a reason to come to the negotiating table.

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Lady Wicket

@EU_Commission πŸ’—πŸ’—πŸ’—πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦

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wisel

@EU_Commission wonderful

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2y
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